Alphen, Netherlands. 18
June. The Duke of Wellington once said, “The history of a battle is not unlike the history of a ball. Some
individuals may recollect all the little events of which the great result is
the battle won or lost, but no individual can recollect the order in which, or
the exact moment at which, they occurred, which makes all the difference as to
their value or importance”. Two hundred years ago today just down
the road from here the Battle of Waterloo took place. Seventy-three thousand French troops under
Napoleon faced some 68,000 troops of the “Seventh Coalition” under the command
of Arthur, Duke of Wellington.
Coalition forces
included 25,000 British troops, 17,000 Dutch, 11,000 Hanoverians, 6000
Brunswickians, 6000 members of the King’s German Legion and eventually (and
famously) 50,000 Prussians under Blucher. By day’s end over 40,000 Frenchmen
were killed or missing with some 10,000 of the Coalition suffering a similar
fate.
Waterloo was not any
old European battle. It was the battle that shaped modern Europe and began the
long and very tortuous road to an institutionalised Europe. A new age of politics and warfare dawned at
Waterloo as the battle marked the true end of the aristocratic age as the modern
industrial nation-state came of power age.
And, although the Iron
Duke would contest my thesis European democracy also marched at Waterloo. The
Napoleonic Wars which Waterloo brought to a decisive end marked the first real
struggle between vested power and radicalism and thus helped established the
European world order that is only today coming to an end. The battle also paved for way for the
creation of modern Germany some fifty years later and the three wars of
European supremacy (1870-71, 1914-18, 1939-1945) which followed and which culminated
in today’s European Union.
Critically, Waterloo
created the political space for the second British Empire which emerged in the
wake of Napoleon’s defeat the loss of the American colonies. Indeed, without rival on the Continent and
unchallenged on the world stage for another seventy to eighty years the British
constructed the largest empire the world has ever seen in the wake of Waterloo..and
one of shortest lived.
Not without irony, for Waterloo
was a victory of conservatism over radicalism, the Congress of Vienna which
followed established the principle of an institutionalised European order, even
though the Congress was dominated by the arch-conservatives Metternich of
Austria and Castlereagh of Britain. And,
although Britain claimed to then retreat into “splendid isolation” Waterloo
confirmed the principle of British engagement on the Continent. Moreover, the
battle reinforced the fundamental principle that Britain would not permit a
single power or group of powers to dominate Europe. It is a principle that the Cameron government
is in the process of abandoning or simply fails to understand.
Waterloo also
exacerbated conflicts, not least the inherent conflict that existed between
France and the Netherlands and between French and Dutch speakers. At the Congress of Vienna almost the entire
region of what eventually became Belgium was granted to the Kingdom of the
Netherlands. Subsequently, a new struggle
for independence began that only culminated with the recognition of the Kingdom
of Belgium in 1830 by the Dutch. Belgium’s
recognition was reinforced by the 1839 Treaty of London and the Belgian
Neutrality Act by which Britain agreed to guarantee Belgium. It was this Act, or rather the Kaiser’s 1914
breach of it that led to the formal declaration of war by Britain against
Imperial Germany.
Some years ago I stood
atop the enormous man-made hill which is crowned by the great Lion of Brabant
which looks out over the great battlefield.
Alongside me were some twenty of so American students. Those of you who know the site will recall
that the modern Brussels ring-road runs close by. Indeed, it was Napoleon’s belief that if he
took Brussels he could force the Alliance to treat with him on favourable terms.
Nice kids but a little naïve I explained to them that Napoleon faced two major
problems on the day. First, he could not
get Wellington to weaken his centre and thus turn him. The Duke simply remained
nailed to a ridge. Second, I explained,
Napoleon had terrible difficulties getting his army across the narrow footbridge
which now crosses the highway. It took some minutes before the American penny dropped
on a very European joke.
Waterloo was one of
those tipping points in European history.
Indeed, far from being a British ‘victory’, which is how the British at
least normally portray ‘Waterloo’, it was a very European event. In certain
very important respects the struggle between Bonapartism and British-led
conservatism spawned the birth of modern Europe. Ironically, the ghosts of that struggle are
present today in both the idea of ‘Europe’ which Napoleon certainly espoused and
British concerns at the over-concentration of European elite power in a few
elite hands.
Nor was the result of
the battle a forgone conclusion. As
Wellington himself remarked the battle was, “the nearest run thing you did ever
see in your life”. As for Napoleon he
escaped the battlefield following his defeat and tried to escape to North
America. Ironically, in a sign of the
century to come, Napoleon was eventually captured by Captain Frederick Maitland
of HMS Bellerophon. Far from surrendering to Wellington’s Army
the Emperor surrendered to what was still very much Nelson’s Royal Navy.
Julian Lindley-French
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